How do you remake a film that never existed?Our June ART SEEN screening is Jamie Shovlin’s ROUGH CUT. Includes an introduction by the director in London via Skype. Also screening is a new version of Darren Banks’ short film, INTERIORS.

Rough Cut, the debut feature from artist Jamie Shovlin, explores the re-making of an exploitation film that never was. At its dark heart is Hiker Meat, an archetypal 1970s slasher movie imagined by Shovlin, complete with hitchhiking heroine, charismatic commune leader and a group of teens who disappear one by one. This tantalising film-within-a-film serves to both deconstruct and pay affectionate homage to the often-maligned exploitation style.

Having created a full screenplay, score and cut-and-paste prototype for Hiker Meat, Shovlin filmed key sections and a full trailer in an intense shoot in the Lake District in summer 2013. Rough Cut contrasts these re-made sequences with on-set footage and insights into the development of Hiker Meat’s script, soundtrack and design, to create a compelling mash-up of self-referencing processes, behind-the-scenes viewpoints and time-honoured slasher tropes.

Rough Cut is a co-commission between Cornerhouse Artist Film and TIFF: Toronto International Film Festival.

ART SEEN is in partnership with frieze. Featuring Absolut Vodka Cocktails.

On Thursday, November 3, our music-in-film series, Music Driven, invited the great filmmaker Penelope Spheeris to the theater to talk her breakthrough documentary: The Decline of Western Civilization. More Info